For the Gorillaz's
self-titled debut album, see Gorillaz (album).
| Gorillaz |

Gorillaz
(left to right): Russel (back), Noodle, 2D and Murdoc
|
| Background information |
| Origin |
Essex, England |
| Genre(s) |
Alternative
rock
Alternative hip hop
Punk
Rock
Electronica
Trip
hop
Experimental |
| Years active |
1998–present |
| Label(s) |
Parlophone
Virgin Records |
| Website |
www.gorillaz.com |
| Members |
2D
(also known as Stu-Pot)
Noodle
Russel Hobbs
Murdoc Niccals |
| Former members |
Paula
Cracker
Del |
Gorillaz is a virtual
band created in 1998
by Damon
Albarn of Britpop band Blur,
and Jamie
Hewlett, co-creator of the comic book Tank Girl.
The band is composed of four animated band members: 2D, Murdoc,
Noodle and Russel.
Their style is broadly 'alternative rock', but with a large
number of other influences.
The band's first album, 2001's Gorillaz,
sold over 6.5 million copies and earned them an entry in the Guinness Book of Records
as the Most Successful Virtual Band.
It was nominated for the Mercury Prize but
the nomination was later withdrawn at the band's request. Their second
studio album, Demon Days, was
released in 2005 and included the hit singles "Feel
Good Inc.", "DARE", "Dirty
Harry" and "Kids With Guns / El
Mañana". Demon Days went five times platinum in the
UK,,
double platinum
in the United States
and earned five Grammy
award nominations for 2006
and won one of them in the Best Pop
Collaboration with Vocals category.
|
Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 Formation
and Gorilla era (1998–1999)
- 1.2 Phase
One: Celebrity Takedown (2000–2002)
- 1.3 Phase
Two: Slowboat to Hades (2004–2006)
- 1.4 Future
projects
- 2 Fictional
band history
- 3 Band
members
- 3.1 Additional
members
- 3.2 Actual
members
- 4 Discography
- 5 Live
performances
- 5.1 Phase
One live shows
- 5.2 Demon
Detour radio tour
- 5.3 Demon
Days Live
- 5.4 Phase
Two live performances
- 6 Related
projects
- 6.1 Reject
False Icons
- 6.2 Search
for a Star
- 6.3 Murdoc
DNA testing
- 6.4 Gorillaz
Entertainment System
- 6.5 Kidrobot
vinyl figures
- 7 References
- 8 External
links
|
History
Formation and Gorilla era
(1998–1999)
The people behind Gorillaz, Damon
Albarn and Jamie Hewlett, formed the group in
1998. They originally identified themselves as "Gorilla",
and the first song they recorded was "Ghost Train", later released as a
B-side on
their single "Rock the House" and the B-side
compilation G-Sides. The trio of
musicians behind Gorillaz' first incarnation, Damon
Albarn, Del tha Funkee Homosapien
and Dan the Automator, had previously
worked together on the track "Time Keeps on Slipping" for Deltron
3030's debut album. The song can be seen as the genesis of the musical
style that continued into Gorillaz' first album.
Phase One: Celebrity Takedown
(2000–2002)
The band's first release was Tomorrow
Comes Today EP,
released in 2000. It was very well received in the UK
underground music scene and generated a lot of word-of-mouth
advertising, as well as a large shroud of mystery over who was behind
Gorillaz and what could be expected from the band in the months to
come. Promo outlets circulated a booklet with the fictional backstory
behind the cartoon band.
The band's official website, www.gorillaz.com,
is a virtual representation of Kong Studios, the band's studio and
home. Inside, visitors can browse through each member's bedroom, their
recording environment and even the hallways and bathrooms. Each room
also has bonus surprises and games to play: for example, the lobby has
a remix machine, the cafeteria contains the message
board on the wall and Murdoc's Winnebago contains a voodoo
doll of 2D. Each member also has their own
computer which contains pictures, samples used in various Gorillaz
songs, their favorite websites and their e-mail inboxes. Because of the
nature of the site, an official fansite, fans.gorillaz.com,
was created to hold the standard band website information, including
news, a discography and the band's touring schedules.
The band's first single, "Clint
Eastwood", was released on March 5, 2001. It became a smash hit and put Gorillaz
into the global spotlight. Due to this, the band members' Hotmail accounts
were abandoned (and later hacked) and the inboxes on the site were
never updated. Later that same month, their first full-length album,
the self-titled
Gorillaz,
was released, producing four singles: "Clint Eastwood", "19-2000", "Tomorrow Comes Today",
and "Rock
the House".
Each of the singles' videos contained humorous and often
ridiculous storylines and imagery, though "Clint Eastwood" and "19-2000" were
the only singles to break through the American music scene. "19-2000
(Soulchild Remix)" became popular after being featured in both an Icebreakers commercial,
as well as in EA
Sports' FIFA 2002. Also
the trumpets from the song "Rock the House" can be heard in
various MTV
shows. The video for "Tomorrow Comes Today"
was only broadcast once in the United States on Toonami as a
"Midnight Run" special.
Around this time, a half-hour TV mockumentary
entitled Charts of Darkness was released. It
follows Channel
4 news reporter Krishnan Guru-Murthy attempting
to track down Albarn and Hewlett after they were placed in an insane
asylum. The special also interviews Rachel
Stevens of S Club 7 fame and a few of the
band's voice talents, who had been given roles to play.
The end of the year brought the song "911", a
collaboration between the Gorillaz and rap artists D12
(without Eminem)
and Terry Hall about the September 11, 2001
attacks. Meanwhile G-Sides, a
compilation of the B-sides from the first three singles, was released
in Japan
on December
12, 2001 and
quickly followed with international releases in early 2002. The new
year also saw a complicated performance at the 2002 BRIT
Awards, featuring the band in 3D animation, weaving in and out of
each other on four large screens along with rap accompaniment by Phi
Life Cypher. Finally, Laika Come Home,
a dub
remix
album, containing most of the tracks from Gorillaz
reworked by Spacemonkeyz, was released in June
2002. The single to follow, "Lil' Dub Chefin'", contained an
original track by the Spacemonkeyz titled "Spacemonkeyz
Theme".
In November 2002, a DVD titled Phase One: Celebrity
Take Down was released. The DVD contains the
four Phase One promos, the abandoned video for "5/4", the Charts
of Darkness documentary, the five Gorilla Bites (short
vignettes), a tour of the website by the MEL 9000 server and much more.
The DVD's menu was designed much like the band's website and depicts an
abandoned Kong Studios.
Along with the release of the DVD, the band's website closed
down almost completely. Kong Studios was no longer accessible, instead,
visitors could only enter a police portakabin, where the message board
and chats were still accessible. From there, a small robot called
G.R.3.G. could be used to explore the abandoned Kong Studios in a 3-D shockwave
environment, though doing so would only grant access to a few games. The
Abandoned Gorillaz Site
Rumors were circulating at this time that the Gorillaz team
were busy preparing a film, but an EMI interview later revealed that plans for the
film were abandoned. In an interview with Haruka
Kuroda (the voice of Noodle), Kuroda stated that Jamie Hewlett rejected
many scripts before giving up on the movie.
Hewlett later explained why the film was abandoned, "We lost all
interest in doing it as soon as we started meeting with studios and
talking to these Hollywood executive types, we just weren't on the same
page. We said, fuck it, we'll sit on the idea until we can do it
ourselves, and maybe even raise the money ourselves."
Phase Two: Slowboat to Hades
(2004–2006)
On December
8, 2004, the
band's website reopened with an exclusive video entitled "Rock It" and the
announcement of a new album on the way, which would be produced by Danger
Mouse. A talent contest entitled Search
for a Star was also announced, allowing fans to send in a
minute-long clip of video or audio or an image file. The prize included
collaborating with the band to create the music and video for "El Mañana",
the fourth single for the new album, as well as getting their own room
on the newly rebuilt Kong Studios website. A second promotional booklet was issued,
recapping the previously issued booklet, as well as detailing the
failed movie production in Hollywood and the breakup and reforming of
Gorillaz. A viral marketing project named Reject
False Icons was formed criticizing modern pop figures.
The first single from the album was "Feel
Good Inc.", released as an EP in Japan and as a CD single in Europe and
Australia. The single entered the UK
Singles Chart at #22, several weeks before the CD single was released
due to the single being released as a 7" vinyl in April, and new charts
regulations included sales at online music stores, where the
song had been available since March 22. "Feel Good Inc." managed to reach
#2 in the UK Singles Chart the week it was released, being the band's
highest ever positioned single up to that point in time. The single
stayed in the top ten for eight consecutive weeks. In the United
States, it peaked at #14. The song also garnered a Record
of the Year nomination for the 2006
Grammy Awards later that year.
The album, Demon Days, was
released on May
11 in Japan,
May 23 in
the United
Kingdom and Australia,
and on May
24 in the United States. The album debuted at #1 in the Album Charts on
its first week, but fell as low as #29 in just seven weeks. However, as
the music video for the second single "DARE"
started getting played on MTV
and other music channels, Demon Days rose up to the
top 10 again. "DARE" was released on August 29, 2005 in the UK, where it debuted at #1. A
Japanese EP followed on September 7. "DARE" eventually reached
#87 in the United States, also becoming a Top 10
hit on the Modern Rock listings. Shortly afterwards, Gorillaz
contributed an exclusive track entitled "Hong
Kong" to the charity compilation Help: A Day in the Life
released on September 10.
The third single off Demon Days was "Dirty
Harry", which had already been released as a promotional single earlier
that year. It was released in the UK on November
21, 2005. On
its first week, it charted at #6. The release of the single raised the
album once again back up to the top 10. The fourth and final single was
the double
A-side, "Kids With Guns"/"El Mañana".
It was released in the UK on April 10, 2006.
Unlike its Top 10 predecessors, "Kids With Guns" / "El Mañana" reached
#27 upon its release in the UK. A week later, the single had fallen out
of the Top 40 in the UK (see 2006
in British music). By the end of 2005, Demon Days
had sold over a million copies in the UK, making it the fifth best
selling album of 2005. Demon Days has since gone
five times platinum in the UK,
double platinum in the United States,
triple platinum in Australia
and has sold over 6 million copies worldwide.
Gorillaz performing with Madonna at the 2006
Grammy Awards
Plans were unveiled for Gorillaz to go on a holographic world
tour in 2007 and 2008. The cartoon members would be shown as holograms
on stage using Pepper's ghost technology, giving
them a life-like appearance on stage. A prototype version of the
holograms was used at the 2005 MTV Europe Music
Awards and again at the 2006 Grammy Awards with Madonna,
where the band played a pre-recorded version of "Feel Good Inc."
However, the tour was eventually called off due to budget issues. Jamie
Hewlett has stated that "...it was extremely expensive, extremely
difficult, a million and one things can go wrong, every second that the
thing's playing."
On September 21, 2006 the main lobby of
Kong Studios was destroyed for unknown reasons and a teaser clip for Slowboat
to Hades appeared and could be played on a TV screen. The
official Gorillaz illustrated autobiography, titled Rise
of the Ogre, was released on October
31, 2006 in
the United Kingdom, and November 2 in the United States, as well
as the Phase Two: Slowboat to
Hades DVD, was released on October 30
in the United Kingdom, and October 31 in the United States.
Future projects
 |
This article or section contains information
about scheduled or expected future events.
It may contain tentative information; the content
may change as the event approaches and more information becomes
available. |
In the November 2006 edition of Billboard
magazine, Murdoc was asked in a Q&A about the future of the
Gorillaz, he said "Ooh baby, have we got something special lined up for
you. I can't say let you in on it yet, but needless to say it makes the
Gorillaz Demon Days period look like a warm up act."
In a 2006 interview with Verbicide
magazine, the band was asked if there would be a new remix album for Demon Days
like there was for the Gorillaz.
The answer was that it was a possibility and that it may involve the Space
Monkeyz again. Also, in the interview, they were asked if there might
be another G-Sides. Their
answer was that it might be possible, too.
In January 2007, websites began listing a March release date for a
Phase 2 B-sides album.
One of the websites, musictap.net, later updated the information to a
pushed back release date of April 3.
According to Gorillaz-Unofficial, the reaction of official parties
behind Gorillaz is that it's just a rumour for now.
The title of the album is currently unknown.
-
Main article: Untitled Gorillaz project
In 2002, there were plans made for a Gorillaz movie, but it was
soon abandoned due to Jamie Hewlett's dissatisfaction with many of the
proposed scripts.
However, in 2006, Hewlett stated that they will produce the film on
their own. American film producer and Weinstein
Company co-chairman, Harvey Weinstein, is also said to
be collaborating with Albarn and Hewlett.
In a September 2006 interview with Uncut
magazine, Albarn was reported saying "[Gorillaz] has been a fantastic
journey which isn't over, because we're making a film. We've got Terry
Gilliam involved. But as far as being in a big band and putting pop
music out there, it's finished. We won't be doing that any more."
In an interview with the Gorillaz-Unofficial fansite, Jamie Hewlett and
Cass Browne revealed that in the movie the band members will act as
other characters presenting a new story, instead of playing themselves.
Hewlett also said that the movie's soundtrack will be the next Gorillaz
album. "The soundtrack will be the third album. Damon will do the
soundtrack, which will be the soundtrack, which will be the third
album."
As of April 2007, Cass Browne is still finishing the script and Albarn
has said that he hopes production of the film will begin in September.
Fictional band history
- The backstory of the animated band members of
Gorillaz, as established by Albarn and Hewlett.
The story of Gorillaz begins in 1997. Stu-Pot was a
not-so-bright but all-around great guy who led a somewhat unremarkable
and uneventful life. A keyboard enthusiast, he worked
as the star employee of Uncle Norm's Organ Emporium. Hoodlum Murdoc
Niccals decided to ramraid Uncle Norm's Organ Emporium to
procure synthesizer
equipment in order to establish a "chart topping" musical group.
However, Murdoc ended up driving his Vauxhall
Astra through the building and directly into Stu-Pot, permanently
damaging ("fracturing") Stu-Pot's left eye and putting him into a catatonic
state. Murdoc was sentenced to "30,000 hours of community
service, plus 10 hours every week of caring for the vegetabilised
Stu-Pot". Not long after, Murdoc again injured Stu-Pot in a car
accident in Nottingham's
Tesco car
park when attempting a 360°, which permanently damaged Stu-Pot's right
eye, but revived him from his coma. Murdoc then recruited the newly
recovered Stu-Pot as the keyboardist and vocalist for
his group, re-dubbing him '2D' for the matching pair of dents in his
head from the accidents.
Murdoc then found a drummer for the group in a SoHo rap record store:
black
expatriate
Russel Hobbs. Russel was a middle-class New York native and was deeply troubled as
a youth. He was expelled from an expensive private school for suffering
from demonic possession. The trauma of
said possession resulted in a four year coma from which Russel was
roused only by an elaborately executed exorcism. After his recovery, Russel began
attending Brooklyn
High School, where he quickly cultivated friendships with a group of
rappers, DJs, and street musicians. He has said that "hip-hop
saved [his] soul."
This was a short-lived respite, however, as all of Russel's
newfound friends were suddenly gunned-down one night in a drive-by
shooting. Russel, the sole survivor, became the unwilling receptacle
for the spirits of all of his slain compatriots, most notable of whom
was the rhyme dropping blue phantom, Del. With their latent possession
of his body, Russel gained incredible musical prowess in percussion,
rap, and hip-hop as well as a disturbing
side-effect: his eyes glowed an eerie white. With this new and violent
turn of events, Russel's family shipped him off to England in hopes
of helping him recover from his traumas quietly—not realizing they'd
put him directly into the path of Murdoc's aspirations to superstardom,
and the excesses that came along with it.
At that point, all the fledgling group needed was a guitarist.
Their first choice was 2D's ex-girlfriend, Paula Cracker. However she
was later to drop out of the band after Russel discovered that she had
sex with Murdoc in one of the studio's toilets. As a result Russel
broke Murdoc's nose in five places. So, like so many British bands
before them, the trio placed an advertisement in NME.
The very day the ad ran, a FedEx freight container from Japan was delivered
to their doorstep and out jumped a mysterious amnesiac 10-year-old
wielding a Gibson Les Paul. The tiny girl made
an incomprehensible introduction in Japanese and tore into a "riff to
end all riffs" which ended with an impressive karate kick to the
air. She then spoke a single word in English to the stunned boys, which
became her moniker: "Noodle". In the later part of 1998, the Gorillaz
played their first show at the Camden Brownhouse which ended
prematurely due to a riot during their song "Punk". EMI A&R man Whiffy
Smiffy discharged several rounds from his shotgun to disperse the crowd
enough to make his way to the stage and quickly signed them to the
label. Ten months later they had recorded their self-titled debut LP.
In the winter of 1999 Murdoc acquired the property of Kong
Studios, a sprawling haunted studio with a rather shady history,
situated atop a hill in the midst of a run-down cemetery and landfill
in Districtshire, Essex.
The Gorillaz lived and recorded in Kong Studios up until their 2002
11-month tour of North America. At the end of July of that year, the
Gorillaz took a six month break in L.A.. There they attempted to get a movie
project off the ground. Meanwhile, that Halloween, Kong Studios had
been shut down tight in its owner's absence by local law enforcement
after an unknown man was seen running, naked and in hysterics, in the
marshes near the studio. The police proceeded to keep the area secured
while they investigated the strange paranormal events surrounding Kong. The
Gorillaz spent the interim period working on their movie, while living
in a large rented home in the Hollywood Hills.
Alas, the film was not meant to be, due in part to extensive
over-partying, in-fighting, and disagreements with producers,
directors, and a notable incident of Murdoc getting himself banned from
the Playboy Mansion for stealing
ashtrays. Understandably, at this point the Gorillaz went on a year and
half hiatus, each of the members going their separate ways to find
themselves. Murdoc headed to Mexico to booze it up in Tijuana
brothels, getting himself arrested for passing bad cheques in the
process. He enjoyed little company in his Mexican jail cell aside from
his raven, Cortez, and two Mexican mobsters who would later help break
him out. 2D went back home to work for his father at his carnival,
re-establish his grip on reality, and come to terms with his newfound
pop icon status with the ladies.
Russel disappeared into the States to literally and
figuratively exorcise his personal demons, regrettably including the
ghost of Del, leaving Russel a mentally and spiritually exhausted
wandering shadow of the man he once was. After shambling around Los
Angeles for some time, Russel was taken in by Ike Turner
and helped to recover, and while living in Turner's basement Russel
recorded his own solo album which was shelved due to strange
supernatural activity inherent in the music itself, which Russel
described as something of a "cosmic disruption".
Noodle travelled to Japan, in a fruitful attempt to uncover
the secrets of her own past which included not only the revelation that
she was a test subject in a secret government super soldier project,
but that she also speaks fluent English. Armed with her newfound
knowledge and iron resolve, Noodle was the first to return to Kong
Studios. There she went to task battling the zombie and
monster-infested darkness of the building, set up the Search
for a Star contest, and began the process of pulling the band
back together to record their new album, Demon Days.
Band members
- 2D - (born in Crawley, United
Kingdom) - vocals, keyboards
- Murdoc Niccals
- (born in Stoke-on-Trent, United
Kingdom) - bass
- Russel Hobbs
- (born in New York, United
States) - drums,
percussion
- Noodle -
(born in Osaka,
Japan)
- guitar,
vocals
Additional members
- Del
- vocals:
The blue phantom in the "Clint Eastwood" and "Rock
the House" music videos and the Gorilla Bite "Jump
The Gut" was, one could say, another band member. In 2003, he was
finally separated from Russel when the Grim
Reaper turned up to claim him; he appeared as a mass of living ectoplasm
and said his final goodbye to his old friend before leaving. The shock
of losing the friend who had hidden inside his body all that time,
coupled with Russel's continuing belief that the Reaper was stalking
him, meant that Russel took an entire year to recover.
- Paula Cracker - guitar: 2D's
ex-girlfriend and the band's original guitarist. In the Gorillaz
storyline, she was ultimately dropped and replaced with Noodle after
Paula was caught having a sexual affair with Murdoc in the studio
restroom. Later, Paula Cracker is one of several people hired by Jimmy
Manson to eliminate Gorillaz. Her status post-Jimmy Manson is unknown.
It was stated in Rise of the Ogre
that Paula was sick in the head, on strong medication, and has a
personal vendetta against current guitarist Noodle. During her brief
time in Gorillaz, she was described as "the weak link" by the rest of
the band; Murdoc called her "depressingly ugly" and 2D never disagreed,
only saying that it was the principle (of Murdoc stealing his
girlfriend).
Actual members
There have been waves of speculation and controversy
surrounding who is actually behind Gorillaz ever since Tomorrow
Comes Today was first released. In the
half-hour TV
mockumentary
Charts of Darkness it was explicitly stated that Damon
Albarn and Jamie Hewlett were behind the project.
However, many people work on various aspects of Gorillaz. To quote
Albarn, "There could be fifty [people] here, but there's two." In
short, the Gorillaz as real, singular human beings do not exist.
Rather, they represent the many people working on the project. More or
less, the only thing that has remained constant in every song is that
Albarn performs the singing voice for 2D.
During the "hidden" credits to the DVD Phase One: Celebrity
Take Down, it states the names of the creators,
the voice talents and those responsible for performing live. This list
of the group's integral performers has changed drastically since the
first album, with the exception of Albarn himself. For a more or less
complete list of people involved in Gorillaz, see this site.
In the most recent live performances (Demon
Days Live), the roles of 2D (vocals and piano)
are assigned to Damon Albarn as 2D, Noodle's (guitar and backing
vocals) to Simon Tong and Rosie Wilson respectively, Murdoc's
(bass guitar) to Morgan Nicholls, and
Russel's (drums) to Cass Browne. However, there are two
touring keyboardists (one on a piano and the other on a synthesizer),
so one could say that both of these people also perform the role of 2D.
Similarly, there is both a drummer and percussionist on the tour, both
at a drum kit, so these people are essentially both Russel.
The band's artwork and music videos are created by Zombie
Flesh Eaters (Hewlett's own company) and Passion
Pictures (animators including Pete Candeland and 2000AD
artist Rufus
Dayglo).
Discography
- Further information: Gorillaz
discography
- 2001: Gorillaz
- 2002: G-Sides
- 2002: Laika Come Home
- 2005: Demon Days
Live performances
Phase One live shows
For the tours affiliated with the debut album, the physical
band played behind a specially designed screen which covered the stage
area. Videos, animatics
and image collages
were projected onto the audience side of the screen, while
choreographed lights behind the screen lit up silhouettes of the
physical band, creating a meld of the physical and animated. For their
first tour of the United States, two screens were used;
one was simply the animatics, while the second, lower screen displayed
the band's silhouettes along with various quotes from interviews.
Demon Detour radio tour
Following the release of their Demon Days
album, Gorillaz began an American radio tour. In keeping with the style
of the band the 'Demon Detour' featured a set of songs played on select
radio stations, along with comments by the four band members.
Demon Days Live
De La Soul performing at the Demon Days Live concert in Manchester.
Gorillaz Apollo Theater marquee, c. 2006
Between November 1 and November
5, 2005,
there was a Gorillaz "festival" billed as Demon Days Live with
collaborators from Demon Days (Neneh
Cherry, Bootie
Brown, De
La Soul, Ike
Turner, Roots
Manuva, Martina Topley-Bird and Shaun
Ryder all appeared live; for other collaborators such as Dennis
Hopper and Ibrahim Ferrer, recordings were used)
and Damon Albarn performing songs from the album live on those five
nights at the Manchester Opera
House. The visual element of the evenings was provided by Gorillaz
co-creator Jamie Hewlett and displayed on screens on the stage, and the
artists performed in front of the screens, with Damon Albarn in
silhouette form for most of the concert (unlike previous concerts,
where the musicians were behind the screens, with only silhouettes
visible). The event was filmed by an EMI film crew for a DVD release, Demon
Days Live, in late March 2006. It was later
announced that an American version of the event would take place from April 2 to April 6, 2006 at the famed Apollo
Theater in Harlem.
Within an hour of release tickets were sold out.
The April
6 show was filmed for a live webcast at MSN Video.
MHD
also broadcasted an Apollo Theater show in HDTV on December
31, 2006.
Phase Two live performances
For the band's live performances at the 2005/2006 award shows,
a different visual effects technique was used to project the band onto
the stage: similar to the Pepper's ghost trick, 3D animations
of the band are projected on transparent film placed on stage, creating
the appearance that the band members were actually present on the
stage. The first such performance by the band was made on November
3, 2005, the
third night of the Demon Days Live
performances, when the band simultaneously appeared at the 2005 MTV Europe Music
Awards in Lisbon,
Portugal and performed their song "Feel Good Inc.".
At the 2006 Grammy Awards, held on February
8, 2006,
Gorillaz opened the show using the same technique, sharing the stage
with a virtual Madonna.
Their performance was a mash-up of the Gorillaz' "Feel
Good Inc." and Madonna's "Hung Up".
However, there was a slight problem concerning the
projections. The music on all of these occasions was rather low in
volume, which Jamie Hewlett revealed to be a flaw with the Pepper's
ghost technique: if the music was too loud, the screens reflecting the
band on stage would vibrate, making their images blurry. This happened
with the mash-up performance with Madonna's "Hung Up".
A week later, on February 15, 2006, Gorillaz performed their song "Dirty
Harry" at the 2006 BRIT Awards, with Bootie Brown
and the Children's Choir San Fernandez. This concert had giant versions
of the video clips on large screens, with Bootie Brown and the
Children's Choir San Fernandez to either side of the screens. A
similar, but not completely identical, version of this performance was
shown on Friday Night with
Jonathan Ross and the video was projected at the 2006 Designer of the
Year Award exhibition, which Hewlett later won.
A world tour was planned using the hologram technology
described above. However, due to extreme costs and fine technical
difficulties, the tour was canceled.
Related projects
Reject False Icons
The phrase 'Reject False Icons' was first mentioned on November
24, 2004 on
a Gorillaz mail out to fans.
On December
8, the Gorillaz website was re-opened with a brand new music video,
"Rock It", which has the saying "Reject False Icons" at the end.
On December
19 the 'Reject False Icons' campaign kicked off with the launch of
rejectfalseicons.com. Fans could submit their photos of ways to spread
the message by using graffiti or by sticking 'Reject False Icons'
stickers that were available for a limited period from the site and
from selected record shops in the UK. It was first Respect False Icons,
but Albarn changed it to Reject False Icons. Noodle said it is both
'Respect' and 'Reject'.
Originally, 'Reject False Icons' was going to be the name of
the second Gorillaz LP, but this was later told to be false by Noodle,
and the second album was released under the name 'Demon Days'.
Search for a Star
In December 2004, the Gorillaz launched their own talent
contest, Search for a Star, to find an artist to collaborate with.
There were on average over 100 entries per week whittled down to around
10 to be put forward for the public vote. The 200+ entries were viewed
over a million times. A gallery room was added to Kong Studios which
displayed all of the entries.
Originally, Gorillaz' competition, was initially run to pick
just one winner from entries submitted to Gorillaz.com. However, at the
end of the competition, it was announced that two further entries—one
from the submitted images, and one from the submitted audio files—would
be chosen by online vote.
The winners for each entries are as followed:
- Video: "Table Manners" by Carlos
"Sourbee" Sowerby
- Audio: "Indian Dance" by Danny "Asidus"
Gonzalez
- Image: "2D and Paula" by Irina
"Schneeflocke" Bolshakova
All three collaborated on the fourth single release of Phase
Two, "Kids With Guns" / "El
Mañana". Sourbee provided his animated incarnation of the "Don't Get
Lost In Heaven (Original Demo Version)" B-side, featured on the DVD
version of the single. Asidus made a "Dirty Harry" remix called "Uno
Quatro" featured on the Gorillaz
website. Schneeflocke created her own artistic interpretation
of "El Mañana", featured on an insert included on the DVD version of
the single.
Murdoc DNA testing
Murdoc has created an account on the fake 'Who's The Daddy?' DNA testing agency website,
and is requesting that anyone who think they bear a resemblance to him
to upload a photo for testing, which will appear on the site gallery.[1]
Gorillaz Entertainment System
A Gorillaz mobile phone game called Gorillaz
Entertainment System (GES) was published by
Gorillaz Partnership under license to RealNetworks
in the spring of 2006 in Europe, and summer of 2006 in the United
States. The game was developed by Gorillaz Partnership in association
with Zombie Flesh Eaters and
Mr. Goodliving Ltd.
Gorillaz Entertainment System (GES) features four
character-based games, each with their own individual gameplay and
style. The games are a unique combination of classic arcade
style games and contemporary Gorillaz artwork.
The name is a reference to the Nintendo Entertainment
System (NES) video game console.
Kidrobot vinyl figures
In 2005 a set of Gorillaz figures were released by Kidrobot to
coincide with the release of Demon Days. Two
variations of the set were released, known as the Red and Black
editions, and a limited edition Noodle
from the music video for "DARE" was also released. Two new sets of
Gorillaz vinyl figure were released in 2006. The CMYK set was released
on October
26, 2006 on
Kidrobot and the White edition set were released on November 2
on Gorillaz.com and Play.com. These sets were far less
expensive than their predecessors, although being made by the same
company and having the same limited release.
References
-
Guinness Book of World Records online
-
EMI Music Publishing Wins Big At The Grammys!.
EMI (2006-02-14).
Retrieved on 2007-06-01.
-
Huey, Steve. Deltron 3030 review. All
Music Guide. Retrieved on 2007-03-27.
-
Joseph, Michael (2006-11-02,
Issue 604, pg 13). Gorillaz in the midst. The
Big Issue in Scotland. Retrieved on 2007-03-08.
-
El Mañana / Kids With Guns.
fans.gorillaz.com (2006).
Retrieved on 2007-03-07.
-
ARIA Charts - Accreditations - 2006 Albums.
Australian
Recording Industry Association (2006). Retrieved on 2007-04-03.
-
Hasty, Katie (2006-10-17). Gorillaz Go Ape With Book, EPs, DVD.
Billboard. Retrieved on 2006-10-17.
-
Pollard, Nate (2006
Issue 16). The Greatest Band That Never Existed?.
Verbicide. Retrieved on 2006-07-03.
-
Gorillaz new US Bsides album rumours.
Gorillaz-Unofficial (2007-01-16).
Retrieved on 2007-02-01.
-
2007's Best Bets: Best of the Rest of 12
Months of Tunes. Billboard.biz (2007-01-06). Retrieved on 2007-02-01.
-
CDs. Musictap.net (January 2007).
Retrieved on 2007-02-01.
-
Musictap says US Gorillaz Bsides album pushed
back / official reaction. Gorillaz-Unofficial (2007-01-31).
Retrieved on 2007-02-01.
-
Sciretta, Peter (2006-06-02). Gorillaz: The Movie. Slashfilm.
Retrieved on 2006-10-01.
-
Williamson, Nigel (November 2006 Issue, pg 88). West London Calling. Uncut.
Retrieved on 2006-10-11.
-
Making a Gorillaz movie.
Gorillaz-Unofficial (2006). Retrieved on 2006-10-01.
-
Gorillaz movie update / reports in the media
/ Jamie video. Gorillaz-Unofficial (2007-04-20).
Retrieved on 2007-04-22.
-
Damon
Albarn: 'no more Gorillaz albums'. NME (2007-04-20). Retrieved on 2007-04-22.
-
NYC Sellout/GES Competition.
fans.gorillaz.com (2006-03-14).
Retrieved on 2007-01-07.
-
MSN Video to Stream Exclusive Live Broadcast
of GORILLAZ "DEMON DAYS LIVE" Concert From the Apollo Theater.
Microsoft
(2006-04-05).
Retrieved on 2007-01-07.
-
MTV Networks' MHD: Music High-Definition
Rings in the New Year With Exclusive Premiere of 'Gorillaz: Live in
Harlem' Concert in High-Def. PR
Newswire (2006-12-19).
Retrieved on 2007-01-07.
-
Jamie Hewlett named UK Designer Of The Year
for Gorillaz work. Gorillaz-Unofficial (2006-05-23). Retrieved
on 2007-01-07.
-
'Reject False Icons' Gorillaz mailout / new
site up 8th December. Gorillaz-Unofficial (2004-11-25).
Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
-
'Rock It' new Gorillaz video premiered on new
site - possible single?. Gorillaz-Unofficial (2004-12-08).
Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
-
Gorillaz launch 'Search For A Star
competition' on Gorillaz.com and in NME. Gorillaz-Unofficial (2004-12-01).
Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
-
Gorillaz Entertainment System phone game -
world first review. Gorillaz-Unofficial (2006-03-30).
Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
-
Real
Gorillaz Games. fans.gorillaz.com (2006-02-17). Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
External links
| v • d • e Gorillaz |
| Band
Members |
| 2D | Murdoc
Niccals | Noodle | Russel
Hobbs |
| Discography |
| Studio albums and EPs: Tomorrow
Comes Today | Gorillaz
| Demon
Days |
| Remix and compliation albums: G-Sides
| Laika Come Home |
| DVDs: Phase One: Celebrity
Take Down | Demon
Days Live | Phase Two: Slowboat to
Hades |
| Singles: "Clint
Eastwood" | "19-2000"
| "Rock
the House" | "911" | "Tomorrow Comes Today" | "Lil'
Dub Chefin'" | "Feel Good Inc." | "DARE" | "Dirty
Harry" | "Kids With Guns" / "El Mañana" |
| Collaborators |
Damon Albarn | Jamie
Hewlett | Dan the Automator | Danger
Mouse | Del tha Funkee Homosapien
Nelson De Freitas | Phil
Cornwell | Haruka Kuroda | Remi Kabaka |
| Related
articles |
Blur | The Good, the Bad
and the Queen | Monkey: Journey to the
West | Zombie Flesh Eaters
Passion Pictures | Gorillaz movie | Gorilla
Bitez | Rock It | Rise
of the Ogre |